Watching carefully is actually very healthy and super eye-catching????

Dangelo 2022-12-03 07:40:18

The film has two climaxes. One is the dance. Emma and Knightley have known each other for a long time. Before, there was a dispute because Emma matched Harriet's object, because they both had prejudice, until they fell in love at the dance. Taking a step back changed my prejudice. At the beginning, Emma's governess got married and left, and the tears that had dried up on her face were particularly beautiful! The fairy weeps! After that, she treated her new friend Harriet wholeheartedly, although she began to mess with the mandarin ducks and put her own mate selection criteria on others too much (actually because she liked Harriet very much and felt that Harriet's quality was completely worthy of being famous. nobility, not Farmer Martin). At first Emma didn't even want to look at Martin directly (deliberately avoiding her eyes, all kinds of euphemisms and elegant expressions that she was not in the same class as the farmer but without demeaning and contempt). Until finally Emma changed her prejudice, found Martin herself, and let her friends get real happiness. She found that the quality of human nature does not depend on the rich and the poor. Knightley is also the same. At first he thought that Harriet was not worthy of a nobleman but a peasant, and Emma tried her best to defend Harriet, praising her quality and thus quarreling with Knightley. Their love at the dance is also a solution to the prejudice, and the plot pushes to a climax.

The second climax occurred in Knightley's confession. Many misunderstandings occurred after the dance between the two. For example, Knightley misunderstood that Emma liked Churchill's son, Emma misunderstood that Knightley liked Harriet, and finally the two resolved the misunderstanding under the tree.

The prejudice and change of the two people happened in many small details. Seriously, each character has its own characteristics, is it really good-looking?

View more about Emma. reviews

Extended Reading

Emma. quotes

  • Miss Bates: Oh, oh Mother, do you hear? MISS WOODHOUSE HAS INVITED US TO HARTFIELD!

  • Emma Woodhouse: We are both prejudiced. You against, I for him and we shall have no chance of agreeing until he is really here.

    Mr. Knightley: Prejudiced? I'm not prejudiced!

    Emma Woodhouse: Yes, but I am. Very much, and without at all being ashamed of it. My love for Mr. and Mrs. Weston gives me a decided prejudice in his favor.